
Gave off an E.M.P which disables all electronics caught in the blast radius?
Shirley if they can feel the heat pulse then they are close enough?
( , Sun 15 Jul 2012, 15:24, Reply)

but they were using clunky analogue equipment in those days, they weren't filming it on a mobile phone.
( , Sun 15 Jul 2012, 15:28, Reply)

and big toggle switches that give you a work out and make satisfyingly loud clacky noises when you toggle them.
( , Sun 15 Jul 2012, 15:59, Reply)

( , Sun 15 Jul 2012, 15:57, Reply)

*goes to return my hero2 as it is useless*
( , Sun 15 Jul 2012, 16:21, Reply)

selling fairy dust too. i've done my research, the beans don't work without it.
( , Sun 15 Jul 2012, 17:07, Reply)

( , Sun 15 Jul 2012, 17:12, Reply)

will have to get back to you, i need to look up the compatibility of angel dust and magic beans.
( , Sun 15 Jul 2012, 17:23, Reply)

and its possible to shield against it. All you need to do it put the item in question into a metal box.
( , Sun 15 Jul 2012, 15:58, Reply)

During the first United States nuclear test on 16 July 1945, electronic equipment was shielded due to Enrico Fermi's expectation of an electromagnetic pulse from the detonation. The official technical history for that first nuclear test states, "All signal lines were completely shielded, in many cases doubly shielded. In spite of this many records were lost because of spurious pickup at the time of the explosion that paralyzed the recording equipment."[2] During British nuclear testing in 1952–1953 there were instrumentation failures that were attributed to "radioflash", which was then the British term for EMP.[3][4]
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetic_pulse
( , Sun 15 Jul 2012, 16:07, Reply)

And yet smoking causes lung cancer, even in people who don't smoke. There can't possibly be any connection between exploding nuclear devices in the atmosphere and lung cancer, oh no.
( , Sun 15 Jul 2012, 21:20, Reply)